The Entrepreneur DNA - Overcoming Addiction and the Power of Authenticity | Eric Spofford | EP 25
Episode Date: June 17, 2024Eric Spofford and I discuss his transformative journey from a troubled past with severe heroin addiction and legal issues to becoming a successful entrepreneur with a nine-figure business exit. We del...ve into Eric's sobriety, which he credits as a foundation for his success, and how living authentically has impacted his personal and professional life. Eric also shares his upcoming involvement in the "Limitless" event in Utah and his excitement about speaking alongside prominent figures like Donald Trump Jr. and David Goggins. Additionally, Eric discusses his commitment to helping others, especially through his initiative "Operation Comeback," aimed at supporting families of addicts. The conversation underscores the themes of resilience, authenticity, and the transformative power of sobriety in achieving personal and professional fulfillment.
Transcript
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What is up, The Entrepreneur DNA family?
We are back with a very special guest.
He's local to Miami.
This has been a guy I've been trying to get on this podcast for some time.
Eric Spofford is here.
What's up, brother?
What's up, bro?
Happy to be here.
This is fun.
So we met about a year ago uh mutual friends
sperber and we all went down to dinner and got to know you a little bit and uh the second this
podcast came out i've been excited to get you on and appreciate it man i've been looking forward
to it yeah dude so you are speaking at a really large event in utah coming up yeah limitless yeah
um yeah excited about that 12 000 person arena uh probably the biggest i mean
that's huge huge especially for the personal development entrepreneurial space yeah uh
enormous venue big crowd big names you know don trump jr david goggins ed mylett etc
good time so david goggins would be one of the guys i'd be really excited to shake his hand right
like i don't fanboy you and I have been in the circles.
There's a lot of people we've met.
Like, I've met Alex Rodriguez.
I don't really fanboy over it.
David Goggins, I'd be like, you badass motherfucker, you.
He's a badass, bro.
Yeah.
He's just a stud, you know?
And I think that one of the reasons he's such a stud is he just ooze.
He's not even trying to be an influencer he's not trying to be
a motivational speaker he just lives it yeah at such a deep level yeah it just explodes out of
him it's almost like he can't help but be david goggins right because he is david goggins so hard
isn't that so i love that we that where he's not even trying to...
At all.
At all.
He's living it, and as a result, it's permeating all around him.
I would make the argument the people that we either look up to most
or probably even have the biggest following.
Joe Rogan is another great example.
Great example.
He was a comedian that was an okay comedian he gets
on serious xm or he gets that or he gets a serious contract because he's just so authentically joe
rogan you just nailed the word and you beat me to it which i think that's what wins today is
authenticity you know i mean you have to be cool yeah if you're like a authentically a boring geek
then that doesn't work but you know
good for you but you know these guys they're just filled with authenticity but also committed to
their mission committed to you know whatever their thing is yeah and yeah it's cool so how does that
play into your success and so for those that don't know eric you guys need to go follow eric
immediately on instagram where else do you want to point him? Instagram, YouTube.
That's really the two platforms I'm native to.
You need to go follow this guy.
He will inspire you.
He will be a champion for you.
He just gives to entrepreneurs in all levels.
But he's had a 10-figure exit already, right?
Nine-figure exit already.
You don't have a formal degree.
I don't have any degree.
And you've made more money
than probably most of the people watching this or listening to this right now how how did you do that
oh man that's such a broad question i mean one thing is i've been unapologetically eric spofford
since the beginning and you know my story just as it meets the background of guys, you can go look this up. There's a ton of media out there on, you know, my history.
But, you know, early drug addicts, you know, addicted to heroin by 15, dropped out of high school right after that, 10th grade.
You know, run the streets to live in this very, very crazy life until I was almost 22 years old.
You did all that before 22 seven years of heroin
addiction you know drug dealing crimes all of that like I grew up in it yeah it was my whole
life and so just before 22 years old I find myself um really just a broken dude I'd gotten my ass
whooped out there committed an armed robbery got in trouble for it
went on the run december 7 2006 uh got on my knees said a prayer in a closet hiding from the police
and said god i don't i don't know what to do i don't i can't picture living my life
like this any longer i really don't want to and I can't really picture my life any, any other way than
what it's been either. I need a little bit of help here. And, uh, strangely enough, man, one day at
a time, I haven't used drugs or alcohol or any mind altering substance in any capacity since
that day in 2006. That's incredible. And so that, that's one thing I say that sobriety is a superpower.
Yeah. You know, God, discipline and sobriety are the foundation of everything that i've done and i'm again very unapologetic about
speak to that i think it's it's been more popular now than i've seen it for a very long time which
is sobriety i you know i myself i was just telling a story my wife has been pregnant we just had our
second child congrats so i really haven't been drinking i haven't gone straight sobriety when you have a pregnant wife like there's no real
reason to drink not even a glass of wine you're just like i don't know we're just gonna hang out
yep so i just recently had two cocktails with another family the husband brought some tequila
and he was like hey let's have a congratulatory cocktail because he just had a kid we just had a kid awesome i have two smashed just smashed my
wife is like here's the real question though how'd you feel the next day no awful that night i literally
had to feed the baby twice that night right like i'm just like why why even have the two yeah you
know i think that there's a broad spectrum of people that are put sobriety or a sober lifestyle within there as a target.
One being people like me that are left without a choice because of the disease of alcoholism and drug addiction.
Sure.
I can never use again.
Yeah.
It's not a choice for me.
I don't get to go do two drinks and feel bad about it and, you know, go, what was I doing?
That would literally ruin my life.
Right. drinks and feel bad about it and you know go what was i doing that would literally ruin my life right and then all the way to the other side of you know people that live normal productive lives
they have complete control and the ability to to moderate the amount that they take around alcohol
they don't really have a a problem with it but ultimately from from one side to the next
what i tell people is this.
Let's forget about this for a second.
You have a vision for your life?
Can't hit a target you can't see.
So let's talk about what your ideal life looks like, right?
What are you in your best form,
your best shape,
showing up the best way possible,
getting the best results?
What does that look like?
Write it down.
Define it in detail, excruciating detail.
Picture it.
Close your eyes.
Squint at it.
What does that look like?
Now, where does alcohol, marijuana, and other drugs fit in there?
How does it help you get there?
What role does it play?
Right? What role does it play, right? And if you, I believe that every human being has a purpose.
They have a mission in life, right?
It's our job to find that mission.
It's our job to find that purpose.
And I call that alignment, right?
When we find out what we're supposed to be doing, right?
When you get in alignment with that, I think that your life becomes so cool.
Yeah.
So exciting.
That's what it's supposed to be.
Yeah.
You're supposed to wake up pumped.
Yeah.
Even when people get that messed up because they're like, oh, well, you know, life's hard.
Dude, I have been through the hardest things you could possibly imagine.
Yeah.
And woken up pumped about it.
Right.
Like, yeah, this is really hard right now, but I get to show up.
That's right.
But I get to show the world what I'm made of.
But I get to show myself what I'm capable of.
Right. get to show myself what I'm capable of right and so when you have that alignment and you have a
vision a goal uh you you understand your purpose you're aligned in that life is just so exciting
it's like why would I want to alter my state of being because it's a form of escapism of course
like and so you know for me I have to be sober because i'm in recovery but for
everybody like dude i value things like mental toughness perseverance will grit
it's not tough to have a couple drinks get smashed and feel like shit the next day that's right
you know what i mean it's not You're not mentally tough smoking weed.
Right.
Like, you're, you know, I'll watch my language, but, you know.
You don't have to on this show.
You're a fucking pussy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, you're a fucking, like, if you're tapping out,
to me, at this stage of the game, how I think about it is, like,
if people want to defend their weed and defend their drinking,
of course you do.
You suck it on like a fucking pac and defend their drinking of course you do you suck it on it like a fucking pacifier yeah of course you do the baby doesn't want to give
up the binky either does he yeah you know what i mean you little bitch like it's just it it is
straight up soft and weak in a form of escapism to be relying on something that alters the way
you feel in the way that you experience reality now the other
point of that for those watching or listening do you if you're hanging out with me or anyone right
so i basically don't drink anymore but i'm not as extreme as you if someone orders a cocktail
around you are you i don't care are you shaming them are you not at all dude not at all right i'm
i'm extreme with the sobriety but that doesn't mean that people can't have a cocktail. That's
right. Have an age rank and having, you know, a healthy relationship with alcohol, please.
It's not what I'm talking about. That's right. But I'm talking about the people that escapism,
that's probably the best, that's the best word. They have to drink to take the edge off. That's
right. They have to come home and have a couple couple drinks because life's just so hard and I'm so stressed and life's so tough.
That is an entirely different thing than I met up with the boys after work on Friday and we had a beer.
That's right.
You know what I mean?
100%.
That's a social event.
Yeah.
God bless, dude.
That's it.
Do that for sure. But when it becomes a working part, when you turn alcohol,
marijuana, or whatever other substance into a tool, into a survival mechanism in how you get
through life and how you experience life, brother, you are a long mile from anything that resembles
what I would respect as mental toughness. Amen. And I would say the reason why I think this is such an interesting subject these days,
I'm seeing more and more successful people come out.
Like Dan Martell, for example.
Love him.
Unbelievable.
And this is part of his story.
Whatever it was, 12 years ago or wherever.
12 years sober.
I'm just like, dude.
But then you look at the people.
You have had a bigger success business-wise than probably most people watching or listening to this right and there are think about even break that down like the competitive edge in
business y'all were doing that i was on the grind i was clear-headed and and and mission driven and
focused while you guys were distracted that's it you guys are out doing whatever you're doing
smoking weed you know taking the edge off drinking weekends nights all this stuff
and i did not one bit yeah and again that's and it's people think it's like it's not going to be
this explosive differentiator right out the gate between the person that's committed to sobriety
and the one that's not but as months years stack up stack up, it's inch by inch, inch by inch, inch by inch.
How many years did it take you to sell your company?
And all of a sudden you look back and you're a long mile ahead of all these other people with
all these other distractions. I started my business in October, 2008, and I sold it for
$115 million in December of 2021.
That was 13 years, two months, start to finish.
Congratulations, my friend.
That is really, really incredible feat.
It was a wild ride.
But to your point, you kept your head down for that whole damn ride.
You didn't let yourself get distracted.
Because we can get off the kind of substance stuff,
but you just didn't let yourself get distracted.
You just kept your head down.
Yeah.
And I think that speaks to a lot of it speaks to the contrary of a lot of what's out there on social media and influencer land today which is you know entrepreneurship is
in businesses pictures of lambos it happens fast you know it portrays this fast lifestyle and it's
really cool and that's just not my experience i got my dick kicked in for a fucking decade yeah
and nobody knew who i was and i was stressed about payroll and the amount of nights that i sat there
laying in bed staring at the wall staring at ceiling, fucking sick to my stomach, like not with the next problem of the day, not knowing how to figure it out because I've never been in a situation before.
And it was it was endless.
Right.
And if you notice, I'm smiling.
Right.
I mean, this is the real that's the fucking journey.
I'm not laughing at your brain.
I'm like, yeah, dude, this is what we just know my experience.
And so you look at my content. I'm like, dude, this is what we go through. It's just not my experience.
And so you look at my content, it's a lot of that messaging.
And I think one of the differences, not I think,
one of the strong differences between me and a lot of your favorite influencers online was
I had a nine-figure net worth before I started making content.
There's a lot of fake people out there.
And so you have to be careful what you're listening to
because the messaging, if you just plugged into Instagram today,
which thank God when I started, it didn't exist.
Because if you just plugged in, I'd be like, what am I doing wrong?
There's all these people with all these cars and all these girls,
all these boats, and I'm over here working 16 hours a day,
inching my way along.
And my message for entrepreneurs is like, listen,
my experience, if you want to know how I got here,
and if you want what I have,
you will look at what and study what I did to get here,
is that I endured very difficult, challenging things,
and I chose hard every day,
and I worked my face off for more than a decade.
And that's what it took.
And it took everything I had to fucking give.
And it wasn't overnight.
And when I could have bought a car, I put the money back into the business.
And when I could have gone on a dope vacation, I put the money back in the business.
And I just had to persevere and stay the course.
And it took an immense amount of grit.
It was incredibly difficult.
And most of the people that started along the way,
the difference between me and them
and why I made it over the finish line
is they fucking gave up and I didn't.
Say it louder for those in the back.
So, you know, but was it easy?
Was it fast?
Absolutely not.
Oh my God.
It was the most difficult thing in the world.
No doubt.
But also the most valuable, right? Well, that experience, dude. Oh, my God. It was the most difficult thing in the world. No doubt. But also the most valuable, right?
That experience.
Sorry.
No, go ahead.
That experience.
I love talking about this.
People look at the $115 million exit, nine-figure net worth.
If you go on my social media, you'll see my yacht.
You'll see a bunch of fancy cars.
You'll see a bunch of fancy cars you'll see
a bunch of fancy friends i was out with jorge masvidal last night took him on my yacht to his
press conference with nate diaz for their upcoming boxing match you see all this crazy shit right
to me that's the aesthetic that gets people's attention that brings them into my world that
gives me the opportunity
to be like yeah yeah that's cool now listen let me tell you something yeah it was so much more about
the person that process created than it was the end result like the the tangible the asset that became so much more valuable for me was the man that got to nine figures
not the nine figures if that makes sense yeah because if you lost it all today
you can go recreate it there's a sick part of me there really is there's a sick part of me that i
mean obviously i don't really want this but you're always looking at your downside and you're always looking at okay worst case possible what could happen I still take a lot of risk like a lot
today you do for sure but it's the only way I enjoy the game everything all it has to be all
stakes in right there you go fucking sick in the head and so I look at it I'm like all right well
since I'm a guy that takes a lot of risk and I take all my chips and I put them into the middle
of the table I have to consider the downside the The downside is I lose everything. Do I want that? No,
of course I want to win and I want to go to that next level. But there's a sick part of me that is
like, but if I did, but if I did lose it and I had my back against the wall and i was down and out again it's almost it's almost like an analogy of
i climbed this mountain i got to the peak yeah it'd be fun to do it again yeah you know what i
mean well so it's either i go climb about bigger mountain i have to find a bigger mountain to climb
that's it or i do it again i do it again well I do it again. Well, I think there is. So I personally, maybe you relate to this.
I personally have found now I'm 42, right?
And I've been in business now since I graduated college.
Again, pointless degree.
Who cares?
Yeah.
But I've owned my, I've never been a W2 employee.
I've owned my own business all along the way, but I've found probably a couple of years ago.
I've, I've created this, what you're talking about without knowing i would create the chaos
in my life to prove to myself i could do it again yeah but i would create this chaos without knowing
i'm creating the chaos i would i would almost intentionally unconsciously fuck some shit up
so i could have to go back rebuild it and look myself in the mirror and say you did it again
dude you fucking saved the day again, brother.
Yeah.
I think that's the importance of having a clear, defined vision
that's big enough to keep you on track.
And I'm the same way.
But hopefully at this, and I've done that plenty of times,
hopefully at this stage of life I've learned that lesson enough
that I don't do it again.
You look at that, well, what does that mean? hopefully at this stage of life, I've learned that lesson enough that I don't do it again. Yeah.
You look at that.
Well, what does that mean?
It means that I have enough that I never have to fucking work again.
I can walk out of this podcast studio and be like, you know what?
I'm out.
Fuck it.
I'm done.
You know what I mean? I'm going on my boat.
Fuck you guys.
That's it.
But instead, I've created this enormous vision for myself.
And so it has me up at 5am.
It has me dialed.
It has me training.
It has me learning.
It has me chasing.
And in that,
the process of all of that brings me contentment.
It brings me peace and I'm content in it yeah you know
because otherwise if i didn't have that bigger thing to chase and i think a lot of entrepreneurs
like you and i and others have this in common i would fucking fill my life with chaos and
destruction totally i have to stay on the course yeah and they're like eric why and and here's the
funny thing and this is where the wires get crossed
between entrepreneurs and the general public.
I like to call them civilians because they don't really understand
what this is like.
That's right.
You nine-to-fivers, God bless, dude, I wish I was one.
You guys probably have a better quality of life than I do.
You know, it's fucking crazy.
But is that they think it's about, you have so much what do you need more
you need more stuff you need more money and i'm like you're so fucking lost yeah you're you were
the materialistic one to think that this is still about money right you think this is about money
yeah i don't have anything left to buy right how the fuck is this about money when i've literally
run out of things to buy right right i agree with you
100 but they're gonna call you money hungry and the whole thing yeah but they're gonna call you
money hungry they're gonna call you whatever those negative ways of saying it's always about money i
hear the same thing people think i'm too money hungry like no no i like the chase of this whole
thing it's it's exclusively for a love of the game. That's it. You know, it's about the process.
It's about, you know, getting up every day and executing at a high level.
And I think a lot of that reverse engineers into this one moment that's very, very important to me every day.
And it's right before I go to sleep.
When I sit down and I get in my bed and I put my phone on silent and I put it on my nightstand and I sit there and I start to recap my day. And I asked myself one question,
am I proud of me today? I, yeah, I'm proud of me. And anything that comes up in that moment
that speaks to the contrary of my conscience of like, oh, yeah, then I know what I need to do.
I got to clean that up.
I know what changes I need to make.
There you go.
You know,
but staying on the grind and stay on the mission and practice of discipline and
hard work and obedience,
um,
that the result of that is I'm proud of me,
but there's not a lot of people.
And so I'll ask you a very direct question.
Do you think we're the crazy ones as entrepreneurs,
or do you think the nine-to-five worker is the crazy one?
I think there are 8 billion people on planet Earth,
and I think God's in charge,
and I think the answer to that question is probably more spiritual
than it is who's know, who's crazy and
who's not. I view life as, you know, school for spiritual beings, having a human experience.
You know, if you have to come to planet earth and be the guy that flips the cheeseburgers and
pumps the gas and works the fry later at McDonald's and
that's what you do for this lifetime yeah then you know I don't know why you need to have that
experience you know in this human you know form that I'm in now I probably will never understand
that yeah but that that's what you're meant to be doing you bro you're blowing my mind right now
because aesthetically looking at you no one watching this on YouTube or anywhere is thinking Eric Spofford is a spiritual motherfucker.
Nobody.
If you just are looking at you, even just how you talk, saying this motherfucker is going to fight me, right?
But no.
But here's what I'm talking about.
You're blowing my mind.
I'm sitting here and I've already had dinner with you. I've already had the personal, you know, I had no idea the depth of what you believe in, the spiritualness that you
believe in that helps you every single day, a be sober, a continue to fight the fight of
entrepreneurship. But it is mind blowing. And it shouldn't be is I think what I'm getting to
is no one should be judging a book by its cover because the depths that you have,
it's obvious why you've had the success, right? It's obvious why you're on a mission to help
others, why you're speaking on a stage of 12,000 people to impact other people's lives, bro.
Because I never would have guessed you would have brought up something that I believe in.
Now I'm West Coast woo-woo a little bit, right? I was born and raised on the West coast. Right. So that's a little bit normal for me to say you're a spiritual being in
a human or, you know, dude, talk to us about that. That's incredible, man. Cause I think
this needs to be heard for entrepreneurs, right? Cause otherwise we can drive ourselves crazy.
We take the spiritualness out of everything and everything
becomes math kpis data driven uh sales but you don't take just be a fucking you know spiritual
human take god out of the equation and i don't mean that in the traditional sense of any set
religion spirituality the universe your creator whatever but you take god out of the equation and everything just becomes
so shallow hollow and meaningless you know and and it's such a uh inexhaustible well of
power and guidance uh and inspiration and motivation that i think one thing that's lost on me and my story is that,
bro, when I told you, I said, uh, it started by me on my knees with a surrender to God in a closet
hiding from an armed robbery charge, you know, coming to know God. And so it's, it's been about
God every day since, uh, my day starts with prayer. My day ends with prayer. My day, you know,
and I think I also said that I'm unapologetically Eric Spofford. Well, that does not mean that I'm
unapologetically Eric Spofford in his own will. I'm unapologetically Eric Spofford in alignment
with fucking seeking what God wants for me and what he would have me do and who he would have me be and what he would have me do.
You know what I mean?
Yeah. seek and challenge themselves and are willing to put themselves out there,
like God's got such greater plans for your life than you could ever think of yourself.
Look at my life. A recent epiphany, there were a lot of questions that I had to answer
to find peace. One of the big ones that I had to find a long time ago was, why didn't I get all this pain?
I've lived a very painful life, a very hard life.
It's been very blessed, not complaining at all.
But my life, if you really understood the places that I've been and the things that I've been through, has been incredibly hard and difficult, including being a heroin addict.
And, you know, I breezed through that.
Seven years of heroin addiction.
Do you understand what that was like?
Like, do you understand what a single fucking day of survival in that world was like?
Not even a little bit.
Most people never could, but it was, it was unbelievably painful.
And so I come out the other side of it and, and I have to make, I have to make peace with like the question of like why me
you know what i mean like how did i get this set of cards well you know the ultimate answer is this
is that i believe that god you know pulled me through those things as as a prerequisite to make me uniquely useful to a lot of people.
I get messages by the hundreds on Instagram, mostly, and all over the place,
and people come up to me every single day. I promise you, if I leave my house every single
day, someone comes up to me, happened five times while I was outside last night, and I'll get more than 100 messages this week where people come up and say,
you inspired me to get sober.
That's why.
That's fucking why.
That's why you were given the cards you were given.
Yeah, so then I look at it and I'm like, well, why am I this crazy entrepreneur?
Like, how did I end up with this house, how did I end up with this house?
How did I end up with this boat?
How did I end up with all these people on social media?
Because, you know, when you look at it, when you reverse engineer it,
if you look at, all right, you have this guy.
He was a drug addict.
He got sober.
That's a powerful story in itself, even if you had a job you know had a family
whatever like good for you man yeah proud of you but that's not my story i'm a guy that was
a ruthless criminal drug addict brutal bro not to robbing people staring them in the fucking eyes
like psychopath yeah that gets sober comes to know
god has a transformational experience with god and and you know the work that i've done around that
but then goes on to to build a net worth of over 100 million dollars
and ends up with all this fancy shiny looking stuff and ends up with a social media following and ends up with
all this attention and at a certain point you as my life started to change because you have to
recalibrate people don't understand that right like a guy that nobody knew and now i go outside
and people ask for pictures with me right this is fucking strange right right and and so i'm like how did i get here and it hit me and i was like oh
god did his thing god did his work and then he shined a flashlight on it he wanted to show it off
that's crazy yeah you know and so i you know, for whatever reason, I think that you talk about the guy, you know,
who is going to flip cheeseburgers for the rest of his life and, you know, and then the
difference between him and us, I think that it just comes down to there's a purpose and
a reason for absolutely everything.
I can only speak to my journey.
I have 110% belief that I had to go through the things that I went through to give me a unique message to qualify me for people to listen to me because I have the lived experience of going through what I went through and changing my life.
People will listen to me that will not listen to fucking anyone else.
You can't go get a PhD or a doctorate.
You earned one just in a different way.
Sure. You can't go get a PhD or a doctorate. You earned one just in a different way. For sure.
And then all the rest of this stuff,
will it put me on a stage in front of 12,000 people next week?
Brother, man, proud of you on that.
Do you know what I mean?
And so that's like the answers to the questions.
And so that's God.
That's the underlying spirit of all of it.
You brought up the cards you were dealt.
I have my own thought, but I want to hear yours.
Do you feel as if some of the more successful entrepreneurs
come from a pretty shitty hand of cards to start?
A lot of them do, yeah.
Yeah, no, as I think about that, most that I know.
And usually within childhood, young, right?
Whether it's really childhood, right?
So I have my own childhood story, family, alcoholics,
waking up in the streets because all my shit.
But then you have the younger, teenage, difficult hands.
I think the majority of the people that I'm aware of,
there is a story somewhere in there
that they had a shitty hand of cards dealt to them early for sure
you know and then the second part of that question would be do you think some of that is self-imposed
right so you choose you by the way i don't know your actual but choosing to do heroin is still a
choice right doing any drug taking a drink to having a beer is a choice to have a beer right
do you think some of this was self-inflicted to say okay i i chose my cards now i gotta
figure out how to play them a couple different answers i i believe in extreme accountability
it's all on me yeah i've i've adopted that in every area of my life. That said, I was 14 years old.
One of my best friends that I grew up with,
known him since first grade, came over the house,
brought a pill.
I was smoking weed and doing stupid 14-year-old stuff, right?
No different than generations before me.
I was doing it too, yeah.
And broke that thing up and I sniffed half of it,
and it ended up being Oxycontin,
which was essentially pharmaceutical-bred heroin.
Yeah.
You know, and so there were some circumstantial things there
that you look at the older generation,
they were doing Quaaludes, they were doing, you know,
different drugs that were Oxycontin and heroin.
And so there's some
certainly some circumstantial things that i didn't even know what i was getting myself into i was
addicted to opiates before i even knew what an opiate was of course you didn't even know the
word right yeah so there's that whole thing but but the spiritual answer the spiritual belief, I guess, is that, and I'm not like a set religion guy.
I actually, you know, have some probably, you know, outside of the box thoughts on that as well,
where you have a bunch of different groups of people with millions and billions
that believe one certain thing that contradicts the other certain thing.
It's like, well, God, you know, God speaks a lot of different languages, doesn't he?
Like, whatever. contradicts the other certain thing it's like well god you know god speaks a lot of different languages doesn't he like whatever and and they're all you know but there's a lot of a lot of spiritual beliefs that actually believe you know the ones that believe in reincarnation that believe
in that process of reincarnation you actually make some choices in your spiritual being before you come back here
and and that just hits me as true that's how I filter what I believe spiritually it's like
does that feel true or not are you sure you're not from the west coast bro because this is how
I was raised in Boston I know brother I'm just saying this is a face fast but so you know in
that I look back at it and I'm like, well, you know, they say that you choose your parents.
And they say that you choose your pain.
Nobody, you were not guaranteed.
You were just, life is meant to be painful, right?
Like, life is hard.
It's supposed to be hard.
Nobody gets out alive alive and one of the
things you're guaranteed to go through is pain and adversity it's part of it it's supposed to
be there are no fucking victims yeah and and so when you look at it like that it's like oh
maybe i just signed up for this tour of duty. You know?
Yeah.
Doing exactly what I was supposed to be doing.
That I knew I was going to,
I chose it.
There's a belief. Talking about extreme accountability,
I mean,
you bring that right back to a spiritual belief of like,
I literally chose this path.
Right.
Yeah,
let me go do that.
Let me go experience that.
Let me go learn those lessons
from a past life i i believe in something very similar like let's just use your example of the
the mcdonald's burger flipper this is their path for this life they had to go do that and maybe
it's because they're young in their lives right you and i may have had 2 000 lives already or
whatever some big number they may be on life 14.
So they're learning the harder lessons, the lessons, right?
And we're going way off what I thought we were going to be talking about,
but I'm liking it, bro.
I think it's real shit.
Yeah.
So let's, let's get a little bit back into the business.
Cause I want people to understand the power that you have as a businessman,
what you've been able to create.
What are you doing now? You've already said you've been able to create um what are you doing now you've already said you've
had your payday you could literally walk out of the studio and say fuck it i'm out
what what keeps you going what are you up to what are you doing uh a lot a lot i'm busy yeah no i'm
busy busy busy busy uh very scheduled and have a ton going on um and so i'll break it down kind of where i
spend my time one i'm the active ceo of another addiction treatment business currently have two
sites ohio and florida uh probably combined i don't know 140 employees uh yeah so it's a lot that's a big yeah decent sized operation uh and so in the
day-to-day with that from from a ceo level right yeah not in direct care i'm not at the facilities
but um you know guiding and running the organization and growing it every day okay and then still very
active in real estate right i've i've transacted both on the buy side and sell side
probably at this point in the last 45 days 24 25 million dollars of transactions it's great uh yeah
it's just busy you know yeah moving this moving that doing this doing that and so and that's
commercial real estate that's a lot of my i I talk about it all the time. One of my favorite asset classes, even though it's not sexy at all is section eight real estate. And so I love, I love section eight
real estate, which is not weird for me because when you think about my background in healthcare
businesses, I'm used to highly regulated third party payer systems. And so the idea that I
provide you a service and bill someone else who regulates me,
that's health care.
Yeah, for sure.
If you come to my rehab,
I'm going to provide you addiction treatment services
and bill your health insurance
and deal with them and their regulation.
It's very similar.
Yeah.
And guaranteed payments or whatever.
So I'm very busy in Section 8.
And then I've been having a lot of fun with my personal brand.
Yeah.
That's a – you know, I monetize it in several different ways.
I have a mastermind group called The Inner Circle where I coach seven- and eight-figure entrepreneurs.
Yeah.
At all different stages of life cycle and business.
And then we also have events where we get everyone together.
We have a two-day event coming up May 16th and 17th.
Where can they go to find that specific?
Just go to Instagram.
Just Instagram.
Eric Spofford, make sure you're following him.
I'm the only one.
Guys, if you come on my Instagram, you shoot me a message,
I'm the only one that has access to it.
That's it.
So if you get a reply, it's from me.
And so, you know, I enjoy that very well. I enjoy that a lot. And then putting out content,
doing stuff like this, speaking engagements. And then one of the big projects that I'm actually
really, really excited, probably the most thing that I'm the most excited about right now in the moment
is called Operation Comeback. Talk to me about it. It is a, so give you some context first before I
tell you what it is. 46.5 million Americans have a substance use disorder. Okay. 112,000 people died of a drug overdose in America last year. You are more
likely statistically, this is a shocking statistic, but you are more likely as an 18 to 50 year old
American to die of a drug overdose than you are a car accident. Wow. It's the leading cause of loss of accidental loss of life in America. Yikes.
In America, we had 171,000 alcohol related deaths last year. Yeah. One out of 10 Americans has what
would be diagnosed clinically as alcohol use disorder, alcoholism and drug addiction,
the substance combined substance use disorders are arguably
one of the largest problems that America faces, right? It's killing our young people. It's killing
our old people. It's affecting everyone. Almost everybody in America has a story of
either their own struggles or them being front row to someone else's.
Yeah.
Right.
The addiction treatment industry,
which I've been an entrepreneur in since 2008.
Now as,
uh,
as an industry is a $35 billion annual revenue business in America.
It's a $35 billion a year market.
And when you think about that,
what does that mean? That means that that's not people that are struggling. That's not people
that, you know, that is specifically representative of how many people went and received addiction
treatment services in a calendar year and what the revenue associated to that is.
And that's probably the people that receive the help is probably a very small fraction that's what i mean it's a very small fraction of people
that actually receive the help compared to how many people needed it that's right that is
representative of 35 billion dollar a year industry nobody has done a goddamn thing for
the families and the people that love those people if here's what's interesting if we combined had a
friend right now say cody spurwer we love cody and cody's one of the most fantastic human beings
i know so this is not a real situation but he went off the deep end right you're like damn cody you
know got on drugs so they you know what i mean like. You know what I mean? Like, intuitively, we know the answer.
What's the answer?
Cody needs to go to rehab.
Yeah, we got to help him.
We got to go down there, hit him in the head with a club.
That's it.
Go into rehab.
Yeah.
You dummy.
Yeah.
What about Cody's mom?
Yeah.
What do you tell Cody's mom to do?
Exactly.
Yeah.
And that is the answer that everyone has. And so when you have 330 million Americans, 46.5 million of them have a substance use disorder of some type, you have a giant pain point of a ton of people that love those people and they don't know what to do and they suffer in silence and they suffer alone
and you know what they actually have the way worse gig than the alcoholic or addict themselves
because the alcoholic and addict goes and gets high and drunk and when you're high and drunk
you care about what nothing nothing not a lot the stressors of life. Gone. Are gone. They're totally gone.
The husbands, the wives, the moms, the dads, the children, the best friends, the employers,
the person that sits in the cubicle next to Nancy who's struggling, they sit at home and they worry about them.
Bro, this is hitting hard because I come from that.
I was the child waking up in the backseat of a car at 2 in the morning on a wednesday because my mom and dad were at the bar yeah operation comeback is an incredibly accessible online coaching program specifically for the
family members and loved ones of addicts and alcoholics i think we launch next week bro
everyone go follow eric right this second for no other reason than that.
Cause you guys all know someone are that person are that person.
And you know,
that person a hundred percent.
And so there's nothing,
no one's doing anything for these people.
And it hit me one day and probably a God inspired idea where it's like,
no one does anything for these people.
And mind you understanding what it means to me and my why, besides everything I just said and how big of a problem this is.
Everyone, when you look back at my life and all that time that I spent using drugs, I was a street kid, right?
And so I don't have much family.
And my friends were my family
fentanyl shows up to to america about 2012 and it kills everyone that i know that i've grown up
every one of my friends is gone i'm the last of the mohicans like right now those people that you
grew up with they're all dead they're all gone yeah i have a tattoo across my
stomach i mean if i took my shirt off i do not have a piece of white that's not tattooed left
on me um but the tattoo across my stomach is actually a graveyard i've had it for a long time
and right here there's a path and there's just one guy walking alone through it
and uh you know that the grief of that is a pain that i live with every day
yeah and i you know i try to talk about it enough to keep their names alive but not enough that i'm
always a debbie down or fucking everyone's day up but uh you know i miss them all and and what
happened with that was i watched their parents and and what happened with them yeah it's the worst thing you could
possibly go through in life I do not think I don't think the death sentence is worse
than a mom or dad losing their child well the person that died is out of it over right they
don't feel anything they don't't know anything. They're gone.
And so it changes their life forever.
I watched them leave children behind, right?
My best friend, Eric McCollum, died of an overdose. He was using drugs, and he overdosed,
and they waited too long to call the ambulance on a Sunday night,
and they eventually did.
And when the ambulance got
they brought him to the hospital Holy Family Hospital Methuen Massachusetts and
and he'd gone without oxygen for too long and so they put on life support and they gave him a
couple days worth of testing and on Wednesday they told me and his family that he had like
one or two percent I forget one or two percent
brain activity left and he's essentially there's just a machine keeping him alive right and so they
made they had to make the decision uh to pull him off and that next day Thursday they pulled him off
life support and I held his hand and Pastor Anthony Miles was in the room, and I sat by his side while he died.
And that was one of dozens and dozens and dozens of people,
but he was like my brother.
And his son, Tice, was nine years old.
And I watched Tice graduate high school without his dad last year.
I watched Tice go to driver's ed and learn how to drive without his
dad you know what i mean i do and so you know my people are dead and then working in addiction
treatment i've seen thousands of people in my career in addiction treatment i've overseen
the the treatment episodes of at this point point, about 60,000 people.
That's a lot of people.
Yeah.
And so with that came a whole lot of moms, a whole lot of dads,
a whole lot of stakeholders, people. And in the front line of America's addiction crisis with, you know,
overdose death and all the suffering that's happened,
I've buried and watched the passing of thousands of people and i'm not
exaggerating thousands and two last week i mean that um and so seeing what happens with the
families i'm like there's just so much that could be done that's not because they don't have the
right answers they don't addiction and then there's a where do they get that what do you have a baby they give
you the book what to expect to what you're expecting and in the you know appendix z in the
back of the book is like hey by the way if he becomes a drug addict or an alcoholic fucking
read this right you know right doesn't exist and it's the one illness that is so so powerful that
it not only sickens the host, it sickens the people around them
and drags them into the quicksand with them.
And the catch-22 is like,
if you can get the family out of the disease,
if you can get them to stable footing,
if you can get them to recovery,
if you can get them to be sturdy,
then you have something to work with.
And the odds and the likelihood of the alcoholic or addict themselves finding recovery,
if you can get their family there first, is exponentially higher.
The recovery rate of people with family involvement in recovery is like,
I don't know the exact delta because I don't think it's been studied, but just from general observation is so much higher than people that's family are
in the mix. And what is this called? The mission we're on? What is that? Operation Comeback.
I love that. Everyone needs to look it up. Everyone needs to follow Eric.
And so I'll be, I'll be doing the coaching. I have a team of amazing
people that will be doing the coaching. And there's another piece to it, which is community,
because I can't tell you how many people suffer as that loved one, but they show up to work and
smile at everyone because of the shame and embarrassment to be able to tell where do you
connect? And so now we've built a community that
we're going to put these people together common problem common mission bro i'm getting shivers
right now because how close it's the thing it's the thing i'm like literally the most excited about
damn let's go anything i can do to help promote that i'm going to do because i believe in it i
came from an alcoholic family my parents brother i could not be more honored to have you
on this podcast bro and i've gotten this deep with you bro uh everyone needs to go follow eric
spofford right now you are a man on a mission love you brother thank you for doing what you're doing
i'm putting everything out there guys that is the end of entrepreneur dna uh make sure you're
following this man eric spofford on on Instagram. Follow the movement. This guy's a brilliant mind, brilliant businessman, very successful,
and has a mission that is bigger than all of us.
See you guys on the next one.
Yeah, of course.